Film Review
The Master returns - not to cheer us, but to break our hearts.
Despite being comfortably into his ninth decade, Alain Resnais still
hasn't lost the knack of making films that reward the eye, stimulate
the intellect and stir the soul.
After his deliciously stylish musical comedy,
Pas sur la bouche (2003), the
elder statesman of the French New Wave serves up another irresistible
feast of a very different kind, a tragicomic portrayal of solitude that
manages to be both witty and poignant. Well-received by the critics,
the film garnered no fewer than eight nominations at the 2007
Césars ceremony, although it did not win a single award.
Coeurs is closely based on
Alan Ayckbourn's 2004 play,
Private
Fears in Public Places (which is the English language title of
the film). Resnais had previously adapted another of
Ayckbourn's stage plays for his 1993 film
Smoking / No Smoking, and would
end his career with an adaptation of Ayckbourn's
play
Life of Riley entitled
Aimer, boire et chanter (2014).
Here, Resnais regulars Pierre Arditi and Sabine Azéma are partnered with Lambert Wilson and
André Dussollier, repeating the remarkably successful ensemble
of the director's earlier
On connaît la chanson
(1997).
The characters that we find in this film are typical of Alain Resnais'
distinctive brand of cinema. At first, they appear to be
caricatures, even grotesques, living in an artificial world that is
barely two steps from a vaudevillian stage show or children's
fairytale. But, as we are drawn into the story, the cosy artifice
- which is at its most extreme in the minimalist
Mélo
(1986) and
Smoking / No Smoking
- melts away and the characters are revealed to be genuine human beings
experiencing real difficulties that we can all identify
with.
Here the theme is loneliness, the abiding curse of our era.
There's a startling irony in the fact that at at time when technology
has made it easier than ever before to communicate, people are finding
it harder to connect with one another.
The fact that the characters in this film are all so
likeable adds to the bitter poignancy of their predicament.
There is nothing in Resnais' oeuvre to date (excluding his documentary short
Nuit et brouillard) that
compares with the abject bleakness of the ending to this film.
This is the sad reality of our time.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Alain Resnais film:
Les Herbes folles (2009)
Film Synopsis
Estate agent Thierry is having a hard time trying to find an apartment
for a problem couple, Dan and Nicole. Each evening, Dan, an
unemployed ex-army man, spills his bucket load of sorrows into the ears
of friendly barman Lionel, whose sole domestic preoccupation is looking
after his cantankerous old father. Whilst Thierry secretly
hankers after his office colleague Charlotte, who is more interested in
religion than romance, his sister Gaëlle fritters away her life in
a fruitless search for her beau idéal on the internet...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.